Best way to null check in Kotlin?

Both approaches generate the same bytecode so you can choose whatever you prefer.


A structural equality a == b is translated to

a?.equals(b) ?: (b === null)

Therefore when comparing to null, the structural equality a == null is translated to a referential equality a === null.

According to the docs, there is no point in optimizing your code, so you can use a == null and a != null


Note that if the variable is a mutable property, you won't be able to smart cast it to its non-nullable type inside the if statement (because the value might have been modified by another thread) and you'd have to use the safe call operator with let instead.

Safe call operator ?.

a?.let {
   // not null do something
   println(it)
   println("not null")
}


You can use it in combination with the Elvis operator.

Elvis operator ?: (I'm guessing because the interrogation mark looks like Elvis' hair)

a ?: println("null")

And if you want to run a block of code

a ?: run {
    println("null")
    println("The King has left the building")
}

Combining the two

a?.let {
   println("not null")
   println("Wop-bop-a-loom-a-boom-bam-boom")
} ?: run {
    println("null")
    println("When things go null, don't go with them")
}

Kotlin ways of handling null

Secure Access Operation

val dialog : Dialog? = Dialog()
dialog?.dismiss()  // if the dialog will be null,the dismiss call will be omitted

Let function

user?.let {
  //Work with non-null user
  handleNonNullUser(user)
}

Early exit

fun handleUser(user : User?) {
  user ?: return //exit the function if user is null
  //Now the compiler knows user is non-null
}

Immutable shadows

var user : User? = null

fun handleUser() {
  val user = user ?: return //Return if null, otherwise create immutable shadow
  //Work with a local, non-null variable named user
}

Default value

fun getUserName(): String {
 //If our nullable reference is not null, use it, otherwise use non-null value 
 return userName ?: "Anonymous"
}

Use val instead of var

val is read-only, var is mutable. It’s recommended to use as many read-only properties as you can, they are thread-safe.

Use lateinit

Sometimes you can’t use immutable properties. For example, it happens on Android when some property is initialized in onCreate() call. For these situations, Kotlin has a language feature called lateinit.

private lateinit var mAdapter: RecyclerAdapter<Transaction>

override fun onCreate(savedInstanceState: Bundle?) {
   super.onCreate(savedInstanceState)
   mAdapter = RecyclerAdapter(R.layout.item_transaction)
}

fun updateTransactions() {
   mAdapter.notifyDataSetChanged()
}